The SSTP implementation doesn't provide packet identification, because it's not required: the protocol is identified by the HTTP header it sends to the server.
"ClientOption", as the name implies, is only used in a client context.
The issue was introduced in 235bd07e67. Before that, an unrelated check prevented UnixVLanSetState() from being called in a server context.
SoftEther VPN originally created the NIC in the UP state and never changed it, even when the the client was not connected.
The behavior was changed in 59e1483dbf, which also added the NicDownOnDisconnect option
The option was disabled by default for backwards compatibility with scripts that don't check whether the NIC is down, but it's not ideal.
This commit forces the correct behavior and removes the commands "TUNDownOnDisconnectEnable", "TUNDownOnDisconnectDisable" and "TUNDownOnDisconnectGet".
PortsUDPSet: This command can be used to specify a single or multiple UDP ports the server should listen on. "0" can be specified to disable the UDP listener.
Administrator privileges are required to execute the command.
PortsUDPGet: This command can be used to retrieve the UDP ports the server is listening on.
The two commands replace the functionality that was previously provided by OpenVpnEnable and OpenVpnGet, respectively.
Originally, StrToPortList() returned NULL when it encountered a number equal to 0 or higher than 65535.
This commit adds a new parameter to the function called "limit_range":
- When its value is true, the function retains the original behavior.
- When its value is false, the function doesn't check whether the number is in the network port number range (1-65535).
The change is required because the command to set the UDP ports will allow to remove all ports by specifying "0" as the port number.
Now that Proto supports UDP, the server can handle multiple protocols on each UDP port.
The UDP ports are specified by the "OpenVPN_UdpPortList" configuration setting, because:
- OpenVPN is currently the only UDP protocol supported by SoftEther VPN to allow a custom port number.
- Before Proto was introduced, a unified interface for the protocols didn't exist; each protocol implementation had to create its own listener.
In preparation for the upcoming WireGuard implementation, this commit renames "OpenVPN_UdpPortList" to "PortsUDP", which should clarify that the setting is global.
The change is reflected in the code. Also, the ports are now stored in a LIST rather than a string. The conversion between string and LIST only happens when loading/saving the configuration.
The default UDP ports are now the same as the TCP ones (443, 992, 1194, 5555).
*** CID 358434: Null pointer dereferences (REVERSE_INULL)
/src/Cedar/Proto.c: 451 in ProtoHandleDatagrams()
445 void ProtoHandleDatagrams(UDPLISTENER *listener, LIST *datagrams)
446 {
447 UINT i;
448 HASH_LIST *sessions;
449 PROTO *proto = listener->Param;
450
>>> CID 358434: Null pointer dereferences (REVERSE_INULL)
>>> Null-checking "listener" suggests that it may be null, but it has already been dereferenced on all paths leading to the check.
451 if (proto == NULL || listener == NULL || datagrams == NULL)
452 {
453 return;
454 }
455
456 sessions = proto->Sessions;
As a side effect, the DH parameter is now applied to the TCP server as well.
Previously, the default value was always used, ignoring the one from the configuration.
When a datagram is received, the matching session is looked up in a hash list; if it's not found, a new session is created.
This method allows to use a single UDP port for multiple protocols, as we do with TCP.
Also, each session has its own dedicated thread, used to process the received datagrams and generate the ones that are then sent through the UDP listener.
In addition to guaranteeing constant performance, separate threads also prevent a single one from blocking all sessions.
- An additional parameter is added to IsPacketForMe(), used to specify the protocol type (currently either TCP or UDP).
- SupportedModes() is dropped because it's now redundant.
- IsOk() and EstablishedSessions() are dropped because error checking should be handled by the implementation.
- ProtoImplDetect() now takes a buffer and its size rather than a SOCK, so that it can be used to detect UDP protocols.
- The OpenVPN toggle check is moved to ProtoImplDetect(), so that we don't have to duplicate it once UDP support is implemented.
The PROTO structure is now used to identify the system as a whole, rather than a single protocol. It's stored and initialized in Server.
ProtoCompare(), ProtoAdd() and ProtoDetected() are renamed to make the difference between PROTO and PROTO_IMPL more clear.
ProtoGet() and ProtoNum() are removed because the related list can now be accessed directly by Server.
From https://community.openvpn.net/openvpn/wiki/Openvpn23ManPage:
--block-outside-dns
Block DNS servers on other network adapters to prevent DNS leaks.
This option prevents any application from accessing TCP or UDP port 53 except one inside the tunnel.
It uses Windows Filtering Platform (WFP) and works on Windows Vista or later.
This option is considered unknown on non-Windows platforms and unsupported on Windows XP, resulting in fatal error.
You may want to use --setenv opt or --ignore-unknown-option (not suitable for Windows XP) to ignore said error.
Note that pushing unknown options from server does not trigger fatal errors.
The function has been greatly improved, here are some of the changes:
- The required SESSION (c->Session) parameter is checked correctly: the function returns immediately in case it's NULL. Previously, the function didn't return in case the parameter was NULL; multiple checks were in place, but not in all instances where the parameter was dereferenced.
- The resolved IP address is cached with all proxy types.
- The "RestoreServerNameAndPort" variable is documented.
- The Debug() messages have been improved.
This commit moves the generic (not related to our protocol) proxy stuff from Cedar to Mayaqua, in dedicated files.
The functions are refactored so that they all have the same arguments and follow the same logic.
Dedicated error codes are added, in order to indicate clearly why the function(s) failed.
Coverity Scan detected an out-of-bounds access issue: OvsProcessData() checked whether the payload size was bigger than the size of the buffer, instead of checking whether the entire packet size (payload size + 2 bytes) was, resulting in an out-of-bounds access in case the payload size is bigger than 1998.
This commit also improves the variable names, the comments and adds two Debug() lines.
OvsDecrypt() returns 0 when it fails, resulting in "size" rolling over with an end result of 4294967292.
This commit fixes the issue by checking whether "size" is greater than sizeof(UINT) before performing the subtraction.
The bug was caused by a typo in the StrCpy() call: the source buffer was the same as the destination one, meaning that the function didn't do anything.
- Fixed the RADIUS PEAP client to use the standard TLS versioning.
- Implementation of a function to fix the MAC address of L3 VPN protocol by entering e.g. "MAC: 112233445566" in the "Notes" field of the user information.
- Implementation of a function to fix the virtual MAC address to be assigned to the L3 VPN client as a string attribute from RADIUS server when authentication.
Hardcoded paths are used in log file enumeration such as LogFileList
command or GenerateEraseFileList function to delete old log files when
disk free space is lacking.
Fixes: SoftEtherVPN/SoftEtherVPN#972
If SecureNAT is enabled and the hostname of the server
is longer than 16characters, every NETBIOS name resolution
query triggers the buffer overflow. If the server was built
with stack protection, the process will be killed.
This commit adds a protocol interface to the server, its purpose is to manage TCP connections and the various third-party protocols.
More specifically, ProtoHandleConnection() takes care of exchanging the packets between the local and remote endpoint; the protocol implementation only has to parse them and act accordingly.
The interface knows which protocol is the connection for by calling IsPacketForMe(), a function implemented for each protocol.
A race condition in the DHCP server caused it to offer the same IP address to multiple clients when they connected at the same time, because an offered IP address was considered free until the final step (DHCP_ACK).
This commit introduces a list to keep track of the pending leases created during DHCP_OFFER, so that an IP address is guaranteed to be offered to a single client.
StrCat() appends a string to an already existing string. In order to know where the existing string ends, it uses StrLen() which in turn uses strlen(), a function considered unsafe because it doesn't stop until it finds the null character.
Since the string was allocated but not initialized, StrCat() was either:
- Working correctly.
- Copying only a part of the string.
- Making the program crash via strlen().
The fix consists in using StrCpy(), which starts writing at the beginning of the string.